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re: Snakehead fish invasion

Posted on 6/13/23 at 9:24 pm to
Posted by PutTheWomacOnEm01
Member since Nov 2019
223 posts
Posted on 6/13/23 at 9:24 pm to
Please educate me. Why is there a limit for a species that is invasive? Same question goes for nutria I guess.
Posted by DownshiftAndFloorIt
Here
Member since Jan 2011
66763 posts
Posted on 6/13/23 at 9:26 pm to
quote:

Why is there a limit for a species that is invasive?


Louisiana gotta get that money
Posted by caro81
Member since Jul 2017
5013 posts
Posted on 6/14/23 at 10:25 am to
quote:

Please educate me. Why is there a limit for a species that is invasive? Same question goes for nutria I guess.



pretty sure his just poking fun at LDWF. they want you to catch and kill and report all snakeheads.
Posted by Kino74
Denham springs
Member since Nov 2013
5346 posts
Posted on 6/14/23 at 10:45 am to
quote:

Please educate me. Why is there a limit for a species that is invasive? Same question goes for nutria I guess.


It's astounding that the government and even scientists will tell us an invasive species can't be eradicated yet the same people will tell us man has been the ultimate force in eradicating species to extinction by slaughtering species and/or destroying their habitat.

Certainly feels like the government is an impediment.
Posted by AwgustaDawg
CSRA
Member since Jan 2023
7377 posts
Posted on 6/15/23 at 6:39 am to
quote:

Please educate me. Why is there a limit for a species that is invasive? Same question goes for nutria I guess.



It is ridiculous. They are supposed to be really good eating but it seems like it'd be a good idea to wipe them out if possible.

They have a bounty on an invasive species in Washington State, squawfish (there is apolitically correct name but I don't remember it). The regulations are RIDICULOUS. One hook per license, no baiting, no netting, size and bad limits etc. Yet they pay folks to catch the damned things. They are not good eating but if they were serious about getting rid of them they'd pay the bounty on any and all brought to scale and they'd be shed of them. Even with the regulations there are 10 or more people paid over $50K a year catching the things...they provide a list of all payouts and the outdoor pages of local papers print that information. They also can't be caught except for daylight hours and during certain seasons. Supposed to be damaging the salmon populations and normally you can't look at a salmon without getting ticketed. I am sure fisheries biologists have their reasons and they know more than me but it doesn't make any sense.
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